Hmmm… This was a perfectly reasonable book, but one I don't think actually bears that much of a place on the shelves. Bear with me. I certainly started this with the idea of buying it for someone I know as a gift – both a linguist and a Buddhist, she would love the definitions of elusive exotic words and how they could inspire meditative connection to the world, or the search for pleasure, or define one of those mindful pauses the world needs. But I soon dissuaded myself of the idea – she gets pleasure because she is a linguist, amongst other things, and this book then, in feeding the inquisitive with the results of the author's inquisitiveness, is just preaching to the converted. Surely happiness goes hand in hand with curiosity, and as she easily demonstrated one, why would I doubt she had the other?
At the same time, I could see the definite merits in this book. The format is fine; fifty concepts get full-page definitions and discussion, and a full artwork each, and all of those look wonderful. We also get a few box-outs of different relevant topics. It would work as an ideal gift book, then, for the worldly wise, and those seeking a bit of calm and advice, but for the simple reason that the search for pleasure is a pleasure itself. The readers of this book will be intelligent, knowing, globally astute, ergo they'll be happy. The miserable and inward won't care a monkeys what the Tagalog language has to say about that.
Those people who perhaps are happiest with these pages may well be sociologists. I'm sure dissertations have already been published regarding the global spread of 'hygge', but this book also reminds me of the decades when we scoffed at the Spanish for their siesta-heavy, 'manana' attitude. And boy haven't we changed our judgement about that?! This then can raise academic debate (or a 'sobremesa', at least), and is perfectly pleasant, but I think many of those who are on board with it won't actually need it.